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Sunday, November 1, 2015

Dave Jersey posts "Original research: News report action alert: Association for Behavior Analysis International "approves" Judge Rotenberg (electroshock "treatment/torture") Center." originally posted on Reward and Consent.Trigger/Content Warning for discussion on ABA and the Judge Rotenberg Center. This information was published by ASAN about two days after Reward and Consent broke the news. The connection between ABAI and JRC was established by autism researcher Michelle Dawson many years earlier, but ABAI was denying any official approval of JRC. This is the first time this has been proven and exposed to the World Wide Web, the official approval of JRC by the biggest Applied Behavior Analysis organization in the world. JRC uses painful electric skin shock contingent upon non-compliance, classroom disruption, self-injury, and aggression, but JRC's own admission, to autistics and others with disabilities. I'm a proud schizophrenic blogger.

Action alert!

Advocates against the school of painful electric skin shock "treatment," be advised.

JRC houses autistics and other children and adults with disabilities and electroshocks them for behaviors as mild as cursing in class and popping their own pimples (See Davies, 2014, Sec. 3: Judge Rotenberg Center Today, Par. 4.) as well as for self-injury and aggression. The latter is possibly information which JRC spokespeople publicly volunteer much more often than they admit shocking children contingent upon their emissions of the long list of minor behaviors as reported by Davies.

For example, in the CBS Evening News video and text article, at 4:45 in the video and within the news text, JRC Director, Glenda Crookes, is only reported saying, “When you put that device on them, they're not hurting themselves anymore, they're not hurting other people anymore….”

In the text, CBS news journalist Amy Burkholder says, “Nancy Weiss, Director of the National Leadership Consortium on Developmental Disabilities at the University of Delaware … disputes JRC's claim shocks are only used for students with self-mutilating or life threatening behaviors.”

So in their May, 2015 convention Program Book, the Association for Behavior Analysis International (ABAI, 2015) shows it has officially approved the JRC. It does have a disclaimer against their official endorsement of any presenter's content (p. 5), but JRC is a "sponsor" (p. 26) and an ABAI committee has "approved" such sponsors as "being aligned with ABAI's mission" (p. 19).

Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) is the science of human and non-human behavior that uses rewards and punishments to eliminate or reduce the frequencies of behaviors the professionals deem to be "problem behaviors." They also teach skills and positively reinforce pro-social behaviors. In the past they believed they had the ability to prevent homosexuality (Dawson, 2004) which they had judged to be a "problem of social importance." (See the "social importance" term used by the Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2015.)

Now this lucrative profession is busy judging autistics as its primary target population. In January 2016, ABAI will hold its Tenth Annual Autism Conference.

Identity-first is more preferred than person-first language among autistic people, so it’s often better to say “an autistic” than a “person with autism,” as leading autistic self-advocate, Lydia Brown, has described. Proud autistic usage is different than the person-first language preferred by many self-advocates with disabilities.

According to this week's Program Book, JRC is now prepared to present reports to their behavior analysis experimental and "treatment" peers who are now gathering in Texas (ABAI, 2015).

JRC is a "Bronze level sponsor" of the convention (ABAI, 2015, p. 26). The Program Book for this major, once-a-year event says, "ABAI Convention Sponsors have been approved by the Organizational Review Committee as being aligned with ABAI’s mission to contribute to the well-being of society by developing, enhancing, and supporting the growth and vitality of the science of behavior analysis through research, education, and practice (p. 19)." So does this mean that with each more powerful shock device the JRC invents, the science is "growing" with new "vitality"?

In Symposium #55, JRC representatives will present a case for "Frequency Measurement of Stereotypical Behavior (ABAI, 2015, p. 87)." ASAN (2013, p. 10) describes their own autistic stereotypy as follows: "We often use repeated motions, like rocking or flapping our hands/arms, to help us handle our sensory over- or under-load. These are often called stereotypies, self-stimulation, or 'stimming.' Stimming can make it easier to calm ourselves, understand our environment, and think more clearly." However, ABA has been trying to eliminate their stereotypy since the 1960s. (See Rapp and Vollmer, 2004.)

JRC will also present item 47: "Use of Computer Software to Teach Fractions (ABAI, 2015, p. 197)" and item 100: "Checking the Retention of Skills Taught in a One-to-One Setting (p. 250)." They also have a full page ad in the Program Book (p. 207).

Therefore, please tweet your opinion about ABAI's official approval of JRC to @ABAIEvents.

Also, please join the Association for Behavior Analysis International Facebook group and tell them how you feel. There have been other disabled, non-disabled, and autistic self-advocates speaking out very well in this ABAI Facebook community of over 10,000 Facebook users. It is not necessary to know the language of behavior analysis in order to tell them how you feel about the ethics behind their behavior modifications. The behavior analysts often use their scientific jargon, but don't let them intimidate you. Some of them often talk about data, evidence, and science as just about all that's needed to support their arguments, but the ethics of ABA is above and beyond all that and they often neglect sound ethics in their talk about data.

Without reporting any "functional analysis" of this blogger's Facebook behavior, a few behaviorists have called me an "attention-seeker" and an internet "troll." If you don't like how they talk to you, don't attack them personally. Stick to the arguments. It's easy to block an offensive person's Facebook profile and hopefully you won't even see their profiles in Facebook any more. Most of the vocal members do argue the issues without being personally offensive. I plan to return to this Facebook group often to back you up if you do want to get involved in this manner.

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